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Service Science, Management, and Engineering (SSME): A Next Frontier in Education, Employment, Innovation, and Economic Growth. Dr. Jim Spohrer Director, Services Research IBM Almaden Research Center, San Jose, CA spohrer@us.ibm.com. Title slide. Communications of the ACM, July 2006.
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Service Science, Management, and Engineering (SSME):A Next Frontier in Education,Employment, Innovation, andEconomic Growth Dr. Jim Spohrer Director, Services Research IBM Almaden Research Center, San Jose, CA spohrer@us.ibm.com Title slide
IBM Definition of Service: The application of Business & IT competences for the benefit of clients and society Business Consulting Services & Project-based Systems Integration Business Transformation Outsourcing Strategic Outsourcing & IT Hardware, Software & Services Application Management 2003: 50 of 3000 of 320,000 2006: 550 of 3200 of 340,000 Indian workforce has gone from 9,000 to 43,000 in just two and a half years.
2007 Services Area Strategies 1. Business Value 2. Services Software Engineering 4. Services Optimization 5. Services Information 3. Services Management and Products SSME – Service Science, Management andEngineering
Today’s talk • Part I: Context • Part II: Progress • Part III: Science
What is SSME, really? • An urgent “call to action” • To become more systematic about innovation in services • Complements product and process innovation methods • To develop “a science of service” that studies service systems • A proposed academic discipline • Draws on many existing disciplines • If the study of service systems is legitimate in engineering, business, social sciences, and information schools – that will be good progress • However, integration into a new specialty (looking for our Einstein) is ultimate goal • A proposed research area • Service systems are designed (computer systems) • Service systems evolve (linguistic and social systems) • Service systems have scale-emergent properties (economic systems)
Because the world is a giant service system. Why is SSME so important? Top Ten Nations by Labor Force Size (about 50% of world labor in just 10 nations) A = Agriculture, G = Goods, S = Services 2004 2004 United States (A) Agriculture: Value from harvesting nature (G) Goods: Value from making products (S) Services: Value from enhancing the capabilities of things (customizing, distributing, etc.) and interactions between things The largest labor force migration in human history is underway, driven by global communications, business and technology growth, urbanization and low cost labor. >50% (S) services, >33% (S) services
How to invest to make systematic improvements?(year-over-year) Service System 1. People (division of labor, multi-tasking) 2. Technology 3. Internal and External Service Systems Connected by Value Propositions 4. Shared Information (language, laws, measures) Computational System People do more, high value win-win actions Shrink Transistors
What types of service systems would we like to improve? • People • Families • Businesses • Cities • Nations • Hospitals • Universities • Call Centers • Data Centers • And many more…
People • “All the information workers observed experienced a high level of fragmentation in the execution of their activities. People averaged about three minutes on a task and about two minutes on any electronic device or paper document before switching tasks.” • Gloria Mark and Victor M. Gonzalez, authors of “Research on Multi-tasking in the Workplace”
Families • "The family is the natural and fundamental group unit of society and is entitled to protection by society and the State". • Article 16(3) of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights • “Developing a Family Mission Statement” • Stephen R. Covey, author of The 7 Habits of Highly Effective Families • “In the agricultural age, work-life-and-family blended seamlessly.” • IBM GIO 1.0
Businesses • “…of the 100 entities with the largest Gross National Product (GNP), about half were multi-national corporations (MNCs)… The MNCs do not exist on traditional maps.” • Alfred Chandler and Bruce Mazlish, authors of Leviathans • “The corporation has evolved constantly during its long history. The MNC of the late twentieth century … were very different from the great trading enterprises of the 1700s. The type of business organization that is now emerging -- the globally integrated enterprise -- marks just as big a leap. “ • Sam Palmisano, CEO IBM in Foreign Affairs
Cities • “Cities are the defining artifacts of civilisation. All the achievements and failings of humanity are here… We shape the city, and then it shapes us. Today, almost half the global population lives in cities.” • John Reader, author of Cities • IBM Releases ``IBM and the Future of our Cities'' Podcast • IBM Press Release 2005
Nations • “Understanding economic change including everything from the rise of the Western world to the demise of the Soviet Union requires that we cast a net much broader than purely economic change because it is a result of changes in (1) the quantity and quality of human beings; (2) in the stock of human knowledge particularly as applied to human command over nature; and (3) the institutional framework that defines the deliberate incentive structure of a society.” • Douglass C. North, author of Understanding the Process of Economic Change
Hospitals • “Modern medicine is one of those incredible works of reason: an elaborate system of specialized knowledge, technical procedures, and rules of behavior.” • Paul Starr, author of The Social Transformation of American Medicine
Universities • “The contemporary American university is in fact a knowledge conglomerate in its extensive activities, and this role is costly to sustain.” • Roger L. Geiger, author of Knowledge and Money: Research Universities and the Paradox of the Marketplace
Call Centers • “Call Centers For Dummies helps put a value on customer relations efforts undertaken in call centers and helps managers implement new strategies for continual improvement of customer service.” • Réal Bergevin, author of Call Centers For Dummies
Data Centers • “All data centers are unique, but they all share the same mission: to protect your company’s valuable information.” • Douglas Alger, author of Build the Best Data Center Facility for Your Business
People Families Businesses Cities Nations Hospitals Universities Call Centers Data Centers Professional Associations Disciplinary Associations Government Agencies PACs NGOs Non-Profits Foundations On-line Communities, MMORPGs, Virtual Worlds Some Types of Service Systems
Can there really be a science of service? “Wherever there are phenomena, there can be a science to describe and explain those phenomena. Thus, the simplest (and correct) answer to “What is botany?” is, “Botany is the study of plants.” And zoology is the study of animals, astronomy the study of stars, and so on. Phenomena breed sciences.” - Newell, A., Perlis, A. & Simon, H. A. (1967). Computer Science, Science,157, 1373-1374.
Possible Objections… to Computer Science • Only natural phenomena breed sciences • The term “computer” is not well defined • Computer Science is the study of algorithms, not computers • Computers are instruments, not phenomena • Computer Science is a branch of another science • Computers belong to engineering, not science - Newell, Perlis, & Simon (1967)
Possible Objections… to Service Science • Only natural phenomena breed sciences • The term “service” is not well defined • Service Science is the study of work, not services • Services are performances, not phenomena • Service Science is a branch of another science • Services belong to engineering (or management), not science - with apologies to Newell, Perlis, & Simon (1967)
What makes SSME hard is that it is multidisciplinary… • Services depend critically on people, technology, organizations, and co-creation of value • People work together and with technology and with organizations to provide value for clients • Shared information helps coordinate activities – language, laws, measures, models, etc. • So a service system is a complex socio-techno-economicsystem • Growth requires innovation that combines people, technology, organizations, value, shared information, clients • A service system is a value coproduction configuration of people, technology, internal and external service systems connected by value propositions, and shared information • Services systems are both designed (Artificial) and shaped by evolutionary forces (Natural) Science & Engineering Business & Management Business Innovation Technology Innovation Economics & Markets Social & Cognitive Sciences Social Innovation Demand Innovation
Herbert A. Simon – My vote for first service scientist The Sciences of the Artificial by Herbert A. Simon • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herbert_Simon • “Herbert Simon (1916-2001), in the course of a long and distinguished career in the social and behavioral sciences, made lasting contributions to many disciplines, including economics, psychology, computer science, and artificial intelligence. In 1978 he was awarded the Nobel Prize in economics for his research into the decision-making process within economic organizations. His well-known book The Sciences of the Artificial addresses the implications of the decision-making and problem-solving processes for the social sciences. “ Models of a Man : Essays in Memory of Herbert A. Simonby Mie Augier (Editor), James G. March (Editor)
People Business Products Information Complexity 1: So many types of service jobs/industries enable transform enable develop Consumer services Non-market services Business services operate & maintain utilize design create Information services Industrial services
Complexity 2: So many academic disciplines… People Business Schools of Social Science Schools of Business Management Products & Nature Information Schools of Science & Engineering Information Schools
Dancing Elephants • What I learned at IBM is that culture isn’t part of the game. It is the game. - Louis V. Gerstner • Actually, the cultural change required for ITIL [IT Infrastructure Library, related to ISO 20000 Standard for IT Service Management] success is often a much greater challenge than the implementation of any supporting technologies. • - Brian Johnson, in CIO News Headlines Oct. 1, 2006 • We strongly believe that development of an effective services science curriculum in Chinese universities will have a direct impact on China's economic growth • - Sam Palmisano, quoted Infoweek, Nov 14, 2006
Service Systems Complexity 3: So many definitions of service… Service: The application of competence for the benefit of another Service System: A value coproduction configuration of people, technology, internal and external service systems, and shared information People Internal External Model as complex systems Connected by Value Propositions Technology Information Language, laws, metrics, standards, culture, etc.
Service Systems Complexity 4: No unique, fundamental problems… What are the origins, types, and evolutionary patterns of service systems? How are service systems similar to/different from other types of complex systems? Are service systems the most complex type of complex system? How to invest? How are competences transferred from one service system to another? People Internal External Model as complex systems Connected by Value Propositions Technology Information Language, laws, metrics, standards, culture, etc.
Computer Science & Info. Systems Industrial and Systems Engineering Math and Operations Research Organizational Change & Learning Business Anthropology Science and Engineering Economics and Social Sciences Business and Management “Need I-shaped, T-shaped, π-shaped people… “ – Stuart Feldman (Oct. 6, 2006) SSME is an emerging multidiscipline (frontier field) Slide by Jean Paul Jacob
More T-shaped People to work in, study, and innovate service systems Engineering (Technology) Management (Business) Social Science (People) Slide by Jean Paul Jacob
Part I: Context… • All national economies are shifting to services – service systems are an important type of complex system • major industrialized nations are >75% services, developing nations are close behind – growth increasingly depends on service innovation at multiple scales - person, family, city, firm, nation • credit cards are a simple example of service innovation, requiring integrated business, technology, and social-organizational change to be successful • drivers: outsourcing, globalization, internet, self-service - Wipro, IBM, EDS, eBay, Amazon, Google • New workforce skills are needed - to better study, manage, and engineer service systems • study benefits from a combination of business, organization, technology skills – soft skills enhance hard skills – more organizational transparency and data sharing by industry would help greatly • new profession (like service scientist) needed, and new tool (service system ecology simulator) • Educational system is slowly shifting toward services • service management, operations, marketing, and engineering courses and programs exist - study of complex systems seeks to integrate • Research universities should increase number of grant proposals focused on service systems • new multidiscipline (like SSME) needed, to integrate and break down silos – industry must hire them • National systems are slowly shifting policy towards service innovation • bootstrapping investment in research and education through targeted programs • focusing attention on intellectual property protection for service innovation • new innovation policy and metrics needed (government role in creating historical data sets) Service Science
Part II: Progress(2004-2006) “The SSME Palisades event was the biggest and most diverse gathering ever in support of service education.” – Roland Rust (Oct. 15, 2006)
Progress by country/region • 1. Germany, Japan • 2. Finland, EU • 3. China, Ireland • 4. United States, UK • 5. India, Russia, Brazil, Mexico, and others
Berry (1999) Chase, Jacobs, Aquilano Davis Fisk, Grove, & John (2000) Fitzsimmons & Fitzsimmons (2001) Grönroos (2000) Hoffman & Bateson (2002) Lovelock & Wright (2001) Sampson (2000) Teboul (2006) Zeithaml & Bitner (2003) Textbooks Service Management: Operations, Strategy, and Information Technologiesby James Fitzsimmons and Mona Fitzsimmons
16 Annual AMA th Frontiers in Service Conference 2007 October 4 - 7 At San Francisco’s Westin St Francis
On what foundational logic, could we build a science of service? • Defines service as the application of competencies for the benefit of another entity and sees mutual service provision, rather than the exchange of goods, as the foundational logic • This new paradigm is service-oriented, customer-oriented, relationship-focused, and knowledge-based The Service-Dominant Logic of Marketing: Dialog, Debate, and Directions by Robert F. Lusch and Stephen L. Vargo
On what theory of economics, could we build a science of service? • Firms: Viewed as historically situated combiners of heterogeneous and imperfectly mobile resources under conditions of imperfect and costly to obtain information, towards the primary objective of superior financial performance. • Resources: Viewed as tangible and intangible entities available to the firm that enable it to produce efficiently and/or effectively a market offering that has value for some market segment(s). A General Theory of Competition : Resources, Competences, Productivity, Economic Growth (Marketing for a New Century) by Shelby D. (Dean) Hunt
How do new professions arise? • In The System of Professions Andrew Abbott explores central questions about the role of professions in modern life: Why should there be occupational groups controlling expert knowledge? Where and why did groups such as law and medicine achieve their power? Will professionalism spread throughout the occupational world? While most inquiries in this field study one profession at a time, Abbott here considers the system of professions as a whole. Through comparative and historical study of the professions in nineteenth- and twentieth-century England, France, and America, Abbott builds a general theory of how and why professionals evolve. The System of Professions: An Essay on the Division of Expert Laborby Andrew Abbott
How do new professions and new disciplines coevolve with government institutions? • Emergence of German dye industry, German mid-19th Century • Emergence of chemistry as an academic discipline • Emergence of patent protection in the new area of chemical processes and formula • Emergence of new relationships connecting firms, academic institutions, government agencies, and clients • Demonstrates needed coevolution of firms, technology, and national institutions • Took England and US over 70 years to catch up!!! Knowledge and Competitive Advantage : The Coevolution of Firms, Technology, and National Institutions by Johann Peter Murmann
How does the service economy and the innovation economy relate? • “… modern economies are both service economies and economies of innovation. Paradoxically, they are not regarded as economies of innovation in services, that is as economies in which service firms' innovation efforts are proportional to their contribution from the major economic aggregates. It is as if service and innovation were two parallel universes that coexist in blissful ignorance of each other.” • Gallouj, F. (2002). Innovation in the Service Economy: The New Wealth of Nations. Cheltenham UK: Edward Elgar. Productivity, Innovation and Knowledge in Servicesby Jean Gadrey and Faiz Gallouj
Berkeley SSME Certificate Program http://ssme.berkeley.edu/
NCSU SSME Curriculum for MBA http://www.mgt.ncsu.edu/news/2006/mba_ssme.php
Service Science at ASU http://wpcarey.asu.edu/csl/
SSME: Growing Body of Knowledge about Service 100% Percentage of labor force in service sector: US (blue) and World (green) 75% 50% 25% Economics and Social Science Bryson et al Milgrom & Roberts Clark Bastiat March & Simon Marx Smith Herzenberg, Alic&Wial Murmann, Seabright, Latour, Sen Cohen & Zysman, Triplett & Bosworth, Abbott, Baumol, Hill, Gadrey & Gallouj Management Berry (1999), Teboul (2006) Fisk, Grove, & John (2000) .Davis Fitzsimmons & Fitzsimmons (2001) Grönroos (2000), Sampson (2000) Hoffman & Bateson (2002) Lovelock & Wright (2001) Zeithaml & Bitner (2003) Hesket, Sasser, & Hart, Rust, Ramirez Pine & Gilmore, Schneider, Chase Argyris Taylor Alter Deming Lusch & Vargo Engineering Sterman Glushko Ganz, Weinhardt, Rouse Tiene & Berg, Carley Jaikumar & Bohn